Cognition Flashcards

1
Q

What is perseveration?

A

Perseveration: repetition of the same story

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2
Q

What is confabulation?

A

False answers to Q’s

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3
Q

Why do we examine cognition?

A

Mental Status/cognitive examination often occurs during or right after history.
Impact on rehabilitation
Responsibility for screening/referral

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4
Q

Cognition includes:

A
Awareness
Reasoning
Judgement
Memory
Executive Functions
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5
Q

How does CVA vs. TBI influence cognition?

A

CVA: usually localized pattern of cognitive loss
TBI: usually more global pattern of cognitive loss

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6
Q

Describe arousal:

A

slow fluctuations in alertness that relate to circadian rhythm, food intake, drug effects; ability to respond consistently to sensory input by eye opening, localizing, or tracking with head or eye movement to stimulation.

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7
Q

Define obtunded:

A

Very low arousal/alertness

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8
Q

A&O x 3-4 includes:

A

Alert and orientated to person, place, time, situation/circumstance

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9
Q

Glascow coma scale items:

A
  1. eye opening
  2. verbal response
  3. motor response (normal, pain local/general, posturing)
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10
Q

JFK Coma Recovery:

A

used most often in minimally conscious inpatients

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11
Q

Rancho Los Amigos Cognitive Scale:

A

Descriptive scale that may help teach families learn expected stages and level of assistance for TBI pts

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12
Q

Define alternating attention:

A

Ability to move flexibility between tasks and respond to demands of both tasks

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13
Q

Define divided attention:

A

Respond simultaneously to two or more tasks when all stimuli are relevant

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14
Q

Define sustained attention:

A

Ability to sustain attention over time

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15
Q

Define selective or focused attention:

A

Process relevant information about task and environment while screening out irrelevant information
… remember that gorilla in the ball toss video?!

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16
Q

Define attention:

A

Ability to select and attend to specific stimulus while suppressing extraneous stimuli

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17
Q

Describe Disinhibition and examples:

A

Distraction by internal factors

ex: pt. has to pee and is distracted but doesn’t tell you
ex: making inappropriate comments

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18
Q

Describe Hyperactivity:

A

Excessive motor activity

19
Q

Describe Distractability:

A

Attention to irrelevant factors within the environment

20
Q

A severe disturbance in motivation can be described as:

A

Apathy: absence of response to stimuli
Abulia: extreme version of apathy

21
Q

Describe neuro motivation:

A

the degree of cooperation
the ability to sustain effort
the amount of encouragement required to complete a task.

22
Q

Motivation requires initiative and refers to:

A

the extent to which an individual desires to reach a goal and demonstrate actual follow through.

23
Q

Describe a flat affect:

A

no external expression or emotional feeling, tone or mood

24
Q

Describe emotional lability in a neurological pt:

A

inappropriate laughter or crying

sometimes aware, sometimes not aware

25
Q

Describe executive fxns:

A

Capacity to plan, manipulate information, initiate and terminate activities, recognize errors, problem solve and think abstractly

Capabilities that allow a person to engage in independent, purposive and self serving behavior

26
Q

Describe insight:

A

Capacity to discern the true nature of a situation

27
Q

Describe judgment:

A

ability to objectively make a decision after deliberation

28
Q

Describe reasoning:

A

includes problem solving, organization, sequencing, generalization, levels of abstraction

29
Q

Define dysarthria:

A

motor problem

30
Q

Define dysphonia:

A

production of sounds
Hypophonic: soft
Hyperphonic: loud

31
Q

Fluent aphasia / wenickes:

A

normal rate and melody of speech with some inappropriate words/sounds but no perception of problem

32
Q

Non-fluent aphasia / broca’s:

A

expressive problem with preserved auditory perception

33
Q

Describe perception:

A

Integration of sensory impressions into information that is meaningful

  • Select meaningful stimuli
  • Integrate those stimuli
  • Interpret meaningful stimuli
34
Q

anosognosia:

A

unawareness or denial of deficits/ severity

35
Q

Spatial relation disorders:

A

Difficulty in perceiving oneself in relation to other objects in relation to oneself
Topographic orientation
Figure ground perception

36
Q

Body image/scheme disorders:

A

Difficulties with awareness of body parts and their relationship to one another and the environment
Right/left discrimination
Unilateral neglect

37
Q

Apraxia:

A

Inability to carry out pruposeful movement in presence of intact sensation, movement and coordination

38
Q

What are the 5 types of apraxia?

A

Verbal
Buccofacial
Constructional
Dressing

39
Q

What are 2 types of limb apraxia?

A

Ideomotor

Ideational

40
Q

Define ideomotor apraxia:

A

imitate gestures spontaneously but can’t perform voluntarily

41
Q

Define ideational apraxia:

A

Ability to conceptualize complex motor activities that involve tools or objects
ie: putting toothpaste on a toothbrush

42
Q

Memory includes:

A

Immediate recall
Retention of information stored for a few seconds
Short term memory
Retention of events within a few minutes, hours or days
Long term memory
Early experiences and information acquired over a period of years

43
Q

The MMSE = mini mental status exam screens to ID:

A

unrecognized cognitive disorders in community dwelling elders